The Citizen (Gauteng)

Oz grounds 50 ‘unsafe’ Boeings

QANTAS: AIRLINE TAKES ‘PRECAUTION­S’ OVER CRACKS

-

Removed ‘for repairs’ as 32 other 727NG planes are inspected.

Up to 50 of Boeing’s popular 737NG planes had been grounded yesterday after cracks in them were detected, in another blow to the US aircraft maker following two deadly crashes.

Australian national carrier Qantas became the latest airline to take one of the planes out of the air, as it said it would urgently inspect 32 others but insisted passengers had nothing to fear.

The announceme­nt by Qantas came after authoritie­s in Seoul said nine of the planes were grounded in South Korea last month, including five operated by Korean Air.

Boeing had previously reported a problem with the model’s “pickle fork” – a part which helps bind the wing to the fuselage.

This prompted US regulators to order immediate inspection­s of aircraft that had seen heavy use.

Following the Qantas announceme­nt, a Boeing spokespers­on yesterday in Sydney said less than 5% of 1 000 planes had cracks detected and were grounded for repair.

The spokespers­on did not give an exact figure, though 5% equates to 50 aircraft of 1 000 inspected.

Boeing and Qantas stressed travellers should not be concerned. “We would never operate an aircraft unless it was completely safe to do so,” Qantas head of engineerin­g Chris Snook said.

But the discovery has heightened fears that the scale of the 737NGs’ problem may have been underestim­ated.

The US Federal Aviation Administra­tion had initially ordered immediate checks of Boeing 737NG planes that had flown more than 30 000 times.

But Qantas said it had found the fault in a more lightly used aircraft than those singled out for early checks. One had recorded fewer than 27 000 flights.

“This aircraft has been removed from service for repair,” Qantas said, adding it had hastened its inspection­s of 32 other 737NG planes.

The airline said it generally used the aircraft on domestic routes.

A spokespers­on for Australia’s aviation regulator said the industry response was about “nipping a potential safety problem in the bud by taking proactive action now”. –

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa